LGAIJan 25, 2025

Hardware-Aware DNN Compression for Homogeneous Edge Devices

arXiv:2501.15240v12 citationsh-index: 72025 7th International Conference on Data-driven Optimization of Complex Systems (DOCS)
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of scalable, high-performance DNN deployment on homogeneous edge devices, but it is incremental as it builds on existing compression methods by adding hardware-awareness for device variability.

The paper tackles the problem of DNN compression for homogeneous edge devices, which exhibit performance variability after deployment, by proposing HDAP, a hardware-aware compression framework that clusters devices and uses surrogate evaluation to achieve optimal average performance, resulting in substantial speedup gains such as 2.86× at 1.0G FLOPs for ResNet50.

Deploying deep neural networks (DNNs) across homogeneous edge devices (the devices with the same SKU labeled by the manufacturer) often assumes identical performance among them. However, once a device model is widely deployed, the performance of each device becomes different after a period of running. This is caused by the differences in user configurations, environmental conditions, manufacturing variances, battery degradation, etc. Existing DNN compression methods have not taken this scenario into consideration and can not guarantee good compression results in all homogeneous edge devices. To address this, we propose Homogeneous-Device Aware Pruning (HDAP), a hardware-aware DNN compression framework explicitly designed for homogeneous edge devices, aiming to achieve optimal average performance of the compressed model across all devices. To deal with the difficulty of time-consuming hardware-aware evaluations for thousands or millions of homogeneous edge devices, HDAP partitions all the devices into several device clusters, which can dramatically reduce the number of devices to evaluate and use the surrogate-based evaluation instead of hardware evaluation in real-time. Experiments on ResNet50 and MobileNetV1 with the ImageNet dataset show that HDAP consistently achieves lower average inference latency compared with state-of-the-art methods, with substantial speedup gains (e.g., 2.86 $\times$ speedup at 1.0G FLOPs for ResNet50) on the homogeneous device clusters. HDAP offers an effective solution for scalable, high-performance DNN deployment methods for homogeneous edge devices.

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